73 Ind. App. 563 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1920
On and for some years prior to June 7, 1915, Deere, Hawkins and Company was a partnership engaged in the business of selling live stock on commission, at the Union Stock Yards, Indianapolis. The firm did its banking business with the appellee herein and, when it sold stock consigned to it, it was its custom to indorse in the firm name all checks received in payment therefor, and deposit the same in appellee bank. It issued its checks to the consignors of such stock, drawn on appellee, in payment and settlement for the stock so sold by it.
On June 7, 1915, said commission firm received two carloads of live stock, consigned to it by one J. C. Meek, one of the appellants herein, and sold the stock at said stockyards to divers persons, receiving in the aggregate therefor the sum of $8,789.69, from which sum, after deducting the usual charges, there remained $3,712.25 due and owing to the consignors, the appellants herein. The commission firm deposited in appellee bank on June 7, 1915, $8,604.68 — the amount of its sales for that day; on June 8 it deposited $6,643.39; and on each of said days drew its checks payable to consignors of the stock which it had so received and sold. At the close of business on June 7 said firm had a balance to its credit in appellee bank in the sum of $2,542.44; and at the close of business on June 8 this balance was $3,916.38. The commission firm was indebted to said bank for money loaned and for which it had executed its note in the sum of $3,700, which said note was not by its terms then due.
For several years prior to the time of the transactions in question, one C. W. Hawkins, the father of Sheridan Hawkins, who was a member of the firm of Deere, Hawkins and Company, had been a “general
A short time thereafter, on the same day, the check in the sum of $3,712.25, which had been by said com-' mission firm mailed to appellant J. C. Meek on June 7, 1915, was presented at said, bank for payment and payment refused “for want of funds,” whereupon said check
Thereafter this suit was brought upon a complaint in two paragraphs, to which $n answer in general denial was filed. The issues thus formed -were submitted to the court for trial, resulting in a finding and judgment against the appellants and, their motion for a new trial having been overruled, they prosecute this appeal, and have assigned as error the action of the court in overruling said motion.
The specifications in the motion for a new trial require a consideration of the matters hereinafter determined.
Appellants in their brief have stated their theory of the case as follows: “Appellants claim, that the fund deposited by the commission firm in appellee bank, as aforesaid, was a trust fund, belonging to appellants, and ask that they be given judgment against appellee for the amount of said fund.”
The rule is well settled that a banker who knows that a fund on deposit with him is a trust fund cannot ap
In the case last cited it was said: “The decisions * * * cited by appellant, wherein it was held the bank was liable to the cestui que trust or sureties of his trustee, were based upon admitted facts showing that the bank, with full knowledge that the fund was held in a fiduciary relation, permitted it to be used by the trustee in the payment of a personal debt due from him to the bank, thereby obtaining profits for itself by knowingly participating in the wrongdoing of the trustee.”
In the case of Allen v. Trust Co., supra, it was said: “The principle governing the defendant’s liability is that a banker who knows that a fund on deposit with him is a trust fund, cannot appropriate that fund for his private benefit, or where charged with notice of the conversion join in assisting others to appropriate it for their private benefit, without being liable to refund the money * *
It will be noted that the account was carried in the name of the said commission firm as a firm account. The checks given in payment for the stock by them sold, and by them deposited to their account in appellee bank, were payable to said firm simply by' the firm name “Deere-Hawkins & Co.,” and there was nothing: about said checks or any of them to indicate that the money thus to be paid was a “trust fund.”
In the case of Duckett v. Mechanics’ Bank (1897), 86 Md. 400, 38 Atl. 983, 39 L. R. A. 84, 63 Am. St. 513, it was said: “There can be no dispute that as a general principle all persons who knowingly participate or aid in committing a breach of trust are responsible for the money and may be compelled to replace the fund which they have been instrumental in diverting. * * * If the bank knowingly aided and participated in Clagett’s breach of trust, then the bank is, beyond dispute, as responsible to the new trustees as is the defaulting trustee himself. This liability of the bank depends, however, altogether upon the contingency that it knowingly aided the trustee, Clagett, to commit the default of which he was undeniably guilty. * * * It is equally true that whenever money is placed in bank on deposit and' the bank’s officers are unaware that the fund does not belong to the person depositing it, the bank upon paying the fund out on the depositor’s check will be free from liability even though it should afterwards turn out that the fund in reality belonged to some one else than the individual who deposited it. * * * In the absence of notice or knowledge a bank cannot question the right of its customer to withdraw funds, nor refuse (except in the instances already noted) to honor his demands by check; * *
It is shown, by this record that said commission firm had at different times borrowed money from appellee bank, giving a note therefor, which funds so obtained they had placed to their credit in the account in question; also, that Sheridan Hawkins had received in the settlement of his father’s estate, within a few months prior to June, 1915, the sum of $2,500, which he had deposited in appellee’s bank to the credit of his firm, as a credit in the account, the moneys of which the appellants urge were trust funds.
Upon the whole record before us, we cannot say that the court erred in finding for the appellee. We find no error in this record, and the judgment is therefore affirméd.